additional source Turton W. (1802). A General System of Nature, through the three grand Kingdoms of Animals, Vegetables, and Minerals; systematicallydivided into their several classes, orders, genera, species, and varieties, with their habitations, manners, economy, structure,and peculiarities. Translated from Gmelin's last edition of the celebrated Systema Natura, by Sir Charles Linné : Amended andenlarged by the improvements and discoveries of later naturalists and societies, with appropriate copper-pla. Lackington and co. 4 vol.: , available online athttp://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/83209page(s): 606 [details]

Status regarded to be indeterminable, not polychaete, by Hartman (1959: 593); Gmelin, however, based his taxon on Born's (1778, 1780) Cornu copiae, which by description and figures (1780, pl.13 figs 10-11) is a land inhabiting ("terrestres incolit") pulmonate gastropod. [details]